Screen Keep

Web-powered TV signage

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Use case

Trade show exhibitor screens

Trade show booth screens need to work for long hours in a chaotic environment where staff should be talking to visitors, not fixing a laptop display.

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Quick answer

Use Screen Keep for trade show exhibitor screens when a booth slideshow, product page, QR landing page, direct video URL, or demo page can run on Android TV or Google TV hardware.

Why Screen Keep fits

Screen Keep lets exhibitors run the booth screen from a webpage or supported direct video URL on the TV device, with refresh, scheduling, fallback, and optional online management when show-floor changes happen.

Use case

Best-fit screen jobs for this page.

Screen Keep works best when the display has a clear job, a reliable content source, and simple ownership after launch.

Booth TVs that should run a product slideshow, explainer video, landing page, or QR lead-capture screen all day.

Exhibitors who want to avoid Windows taskbars, laptop sleep, browser chrome, and fragile HDMI setups.

Teams that reuse the same screen kit across multiple shows, pop-ups, or sales events.

Screen plan

Make the display useful in the room, not just technically online.

Start with the content people actually need to see, then remove the failure points that make public screens look unfinished.

What to show

Product slideshow pages, direct video URLs, demo landing pages, QR lead-capture screens, giveaway forms, and booth schedules.

A clean page with the product headline, one visual, one proof point, and one QR action for people walking the aisle.

A fallback page with booth number, contact details, and a short message if venue Wi-Fi or the source page fails.

Failure points to avoid

Windows laptops that sleep, show update prompts, expose the taskbar, or get bumped by staff during the show.

Casting sessions that drop when the controlling device moves, sleeps, or changes networks.

Beautiful deck slides that are unreadable from the aisle because they were designed for a conference room, not a booth TV.

Launch plan

A practical rollout path for the first screen.

Step 1

Decide the booth screen job

Pick one primary purpose: attract attention, explain the product, collect leads, run a demo loop, or answer common booth questions.

Step 2

Use TV-owned playback

Run the URL or supported video directly on Android TV or Google TV hardware so the booth does not depend on a laptop, cursor, or desktop session.

Step 3

Test like it is show day

Check the real TV, remote, network, direct video URL or web page, QR code, brightness, and fallback page before the booth ships.

Related next steps

Continue with the guides that support this setup.

Use these pages to compare hardware, understand the URL workflow, and move from planning to the first live screen.

Use case

Events and Conference Screens

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Topic

Website-on-TV Workflows

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Guide

Display a Website on a TV

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Devices

Recommended Devices

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Planning download

Trade show booth screen checklist

A show-floor checklist for booth screen content, hardware, video playback, QR codes, network fallback, and staff handoff.

Download checklist

FAQ

Questions buyers usually ask.

Can Screen Keep replace a laptop for a trade show booth screen?

Often, yes. If the booth content can run as a webpage, direct video URL, or screen-friendly URL, the TV device can own playback instead of a Windows laptop.

Can exhibitors show video?

Screen Keep supports webpage display and direct video URL mode on supported app versions. YouTube, Vimeo, and most embedded players should be tested in webpage mode before the show.

What should a booth screen avoid?

Avoid taskbars, browser controls, tiny slide text, fragile Wi-Fi-only content, autoplay surprises, and anything booth staff cannot recover quickly.

Build the first screen, then tune from there.

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